README.md

Data-Tag

Data-Tag is an evolved system to classify textual data and web pages using NLP techniques, rather than not so intelligent Keyword-based Tagging. It uses NLTK to categorize data tokens into various "Word-Classes" and then using Open Data from Wikipedia applies Word-Sense Disambiguation algorithm to "smartly" tag the input data.

Setup

After Forking the Repo into your account...

Use git clone to clone this repo to your local machine:

$ git clone https://github.com/rishy/data-tag.git

Install all the dependencies using npm install:

$ npm install

Install all the bower packages:

$ bower install

for first time, install a virtual environment in root directory using install.sh (or install.bat for Windows):

$ chmod+xinstall.sh
$ ./install.sh

Keep your Cool, this will take a while to install all the dependencies. ;)

##Commands

Note:- First install Fabric to run below commands

$ sudo pip install fabric

To install all dependencies in requirements.txt:

$ fab installDep

To run an app :

$ fab runapp

To run a worker :

$ fab runworker

App Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/

Contribution Guidelines

After Cloning the Repo...

Set the upstream to this repo:

The easiest way is to use the https url:

git remote add upstream https://github.com/rishy/data-tag.git

or if you have ssh set up you can use that url instead:

git remote add upstream git@github.com:rishy/data-tag.git

Working branch for data-tag will always be the develop branch. Hence, all the latest code will always be on the develop branch.
You should always create a new branch for any new piece of work branching from develop branch:

git branch new_branch

NOTE: You must not mess with master branch or bad things will happen.
master branch contains the latest stable code, so just leave it be.

Before starting any new piece of work, move to develop branch:

git checkout develop

Now you can fetch latest changes from main repo using:

git fetch upstream

merge the latest code with develop branch:

git merge upstream/develop

checkout to your newly created branch:

git checkout new_branch

Rebase the code of new_branch from the code in develop branch, run the rebase command from your current branch:

git rebase develop

Now all your changes on your current branch will be based on the top of the changes in develop branch.

Push your changes to your forked repo

git push origin new_branch

Now, you can simply send the Pull Request to Parent Repo from within the Github.

Always squash up your commits into a single commit before sending the Pull Request. Use git rebase -i for this purpose. For example to squash last 3 commits into a single commit, simply run: